21 musicians who banned presidential candidates from using their songs

Every rally needs music — the only problem is, musicians don’t always want to lend their songs to political campaigns. Here are 21 musicians who’ve spoken out against politicians playing their tracks at events, ranging from Bruce Springsteen going up against a trio of Republicans to Adele requesting that Donald Trump take her tunes off his public playlists.

Please do stop the music: Upon learning that her music was blasting at one of Trump’s rallies, which he’s continued to hold in the two years since winning the 2016 presidential election, Rihanna has requested to be removed from POTUS’ playlist. After Washington Post White House bureau chief Philip Rucker tweeted that “Don’t Stop the Music” was playing at one of the events, the pop star replied, “Not for much longer…me nor my people would ever be at or around one of those tragic rallies, so thanks for the heads up Philip!”

Taylor Hill/WireImage; NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

Pharrell vs. Donald Trump

At a public event in Oct. 2018, the president played Pharrell Williams’ upbeat track “Happy” mere hours after a deadly shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue took 11 lives. The artist sent Trump a cease and desist letter following the use of his song. “On the day of the mass murder of 11 human beings at the hands of a deranged ‘nationalist,’ you played his song ‘Happy’ to a crowd at a political event in Indiana,” Williams’ attorney wrote. “There was nothing ‘happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for this purpose.”

Governor Greg Abbott used Explosions in the Sky’s “Your Hand in Mine” in a clip endorsing Ted Cruz, and the band expressed their disapproval on Twitter once someone pointed it out to them: “We are absolutely not okay with it,” they wrote. “Those are two people we don’t like very much. We’ll get to the bottom of this.”

Josh Brasted/WireImage; David J. Phillip/AP

Bruce Springsteen vs. Ronald Reagan, Bob Dole, and Pat Buchanan

Good rule of thumb: If you’re a Republican, don’t play a Springsteen song at your rally — especially not “Born in the U.S.A.,” a track that’s not as patriotic as Reagan, Dole, and Buchanan thought. Springsteen requested they all stop playing the song, and beginning in the ‘90s, he started performing a dour, acoustic version of the 1984 track at shows in order to more clearly convey its antiwar sentiment.

Like Springsteen, Mellencamp has a bit of a history of telling Republican candidates to stop using his music: He objected when Reagan used “Pink Houses” in 1984, when Bush Jr. used “R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A.” in 2000, and when McCain used both “Our Country” and “Pink Houses” in 2008.

When McFerrin found out the senior Bush was using 1988’s “Don’t Worry, Be Happy,” he was, well, not happy. After McFerrin voiced his disagreement with Bush using the song, the presidential candidate tried to get McFerrin on his side by asking him to dinner, TheNew York Times reported, but McFerrin rejected the invitation.

Ebet Roberts/Redferns; Cynthia Johnson/Liaison

Tom Petty vs. George W. Bush and Michele Bachmann

Petty means it when he sings that he’ll stand his ground in 1989’s “I Won’t Back Down,” a single used in the younger Bush’s campaign before Petty sent a cease and desist letter. That evidently didn’t scare Bachmann, because she played Petty’s “American Girl” when she campaigned in 2011 and, like Bush, also received a cease and desist letter from Petty’s team.

Unlike most musicians who ask politicians to stop using their songs so it doesn’t seem like they’re endorsing them, Sting requested that Bush stop playing “Brand New Day” simply because he didn’t want to get involved in the U.S. election as an Englishman. “It’s not a polite thing to do,” his manager at the time, Miles Copeland, told Salon. Or so he said: Copeland also added that Sting would be telling Bush opponent Gore to stop using “Brand New Day” as well, but that, according to reports, never happened.

Paul Drinkwater/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank; Tannen Maury/AFP/Getty Images

ABBA vs. John McCain

McCain loves ABBA. In fact, he once told Blenderthat ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” and “Take a Chance On Me” were in his top 10 favorite songs. But the Swedish band wasn’t willing to take a chance on McCain when he selected one of their singles for his 2008 campaign.

Michael Putland/Getty Images; William Thomas Cain/Getty Images

Foo Fighters vs. John McCain

McCain’s campaign playlist was once again shorted when Foo Fighters found out he was playing “My Hero.” “The saddest thing about this is that ‘My Hero’ was written as a celebration of the common man and his extraordinary potential,” they said in a statement, the AP reported. “To have it appropriated without our knowledge and used in a manner that perverts the original sentiment of the lyric just tarnishes the song.”

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; William Thomas Cain/Getty Images

Sam Moore vs. Barack Obama

A Democrat was asked to stop using a song for a change when Sam and Dave’s Sam Moore requested that Obama stop playing “Hold On, I’m Comin’” at rallies in 2008. In a letter to Obama, he wrote that “it is thrilling … to see that our country has matured to the place where it is no longer an impossibility for a man of color to really be considered as a legitimate candidate for the highest office in our land” but also clarified that he had not endorsed Obama and his vote “is a very private matter between myself and the ballot box.”

Jun Sato/WireImage; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Survivor vs. Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney

Most musicians simply request that politicians stop using their songs, but Survivor went ahead and sued Gingrich for playing “Eye of the Tiger” during his presidential campaign. (They went easier on Romney, though, simply asking that he stop using “Eye of the Tiger,” which his team did.)

Bachmann had to stop using Katrina and the Waves’ 1985 hit “Walking on Sunshine” after the band issued a statement saying they didn’t endorse the use of their song by Bachmann.

Ebet Roberts/Redferns; Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Boston vs. Mike Huckabee

Former Boston member Barry Goudreau got in a bit of trouble once the rest of the band found out he’d been playing 1976’s “More Than a Feeling” at Huckabee’s campaign events. “Boston has never endorsed a political candidate, and with all due respect, would not start by endorsing a candidate who is the polar opposite of most everything Boston stands for,” the band’s founder Tom Scholz wrote in a letter to Huckabee before saying, “I think I’ve been ripped off, dude!”

Gary Miller/FilmMagic; Matt Sullivan/Getty Images

Neil Young vs. Donald Trump

Trump announced his bid for president with the help of Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World,” to which Young immediately objected. In a statement, he said that Trump was not authorized to use the song. The Canadian citizen also revealed that he’s “a supporter of Bernie Sanders.”

Michael Tran/FilmMagic; Ty Wright/Getty Images

Steven Tyler vs. Donald Trump

The Aerosmith frontman first asked Trump to stop using the band’s “Dream On” at his rallies in August 2015 — but Trump didn’t listen, so Tyler followed up a few months later by sending the candidate a cease and desist letter stating that Trump doesn’t have permission to use the track and that “it gives the false impression that [Tyler] is connected with or endorses Mr. Trump’s presidential bid.” His attorney clarified to EW that “this is not a political nor personal issue with Mr. Trump” and that “simply, one must get permission from the music creators.”

Theo Wargo/Getty Images; Scott Olson/Getty Images

R.E.M. vs. Donald Trump

R.E.M. did not feel fine when they found out Trump played “It’s the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)” at a September rally: In a statement on Facebook, they asked that Trump “cease and desist” from using their music. Frontman Michael Stipe then issued another statement via bassist Mike Mills’ Twitter that was… less polite. “Go f— yourselves, the lot of you — you sad, attention grabbing, power-hungry little men,” he said. “Do not use our music or my voice for your moronic charade of a campaign.”

Steven A Henry/WireImage; Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

Adele vs. Donald Trump

Adele wouldn’t even let Spotify play her music, so it’s no surprise that she also stopped Donald Trump from continuing to play “Rolling in the Deep” and “Skyfall” at his rallies, saying through a rep that she had “not given permission for her music to be used for any political campaigning.”

Trump’s usage of Rolling Stones’ songs prompted a stubborn stalemate with the legendary rockers. After the Republican candidate played the group’s 1981 hit “Start Me Up” to celebrate his Indiana primary win, the band issued a statement demanding he remove their tracks from his event playlist. Trump, who’d pulled from their discography throughout his campaign, insisted that while had had “no problem” with the Stones, he has the rights to use their music.

Gary Miller/FilmMagic; Tasos Katopodis/AFP/Getty Images

Queen vs. Donald Trump

Queen have chastised Trump more than once for using their music. The band initially scolded him in June after he played “We Are the Champions” ahead of his victory speech during the final round of Republican primaries. Guitarist Brian May wrote on the band’s website that they were actively pursuing options to stop Trump from playing their songs.

In July, the Republican candidate again borrowed “We Are the Champions” for his first-night walk onto the Republican National Convention stage, eliciting an aggravated response from Queen. “Queen does not want its music associated with any mainstream or political debate in any country. Nor does Queen want ‘We are the Champions’ to be used as an endorsement of Mr. Trump and the political views of the Republican Party,” they said in a statement. “We trust, hope and expect that Mr. Trump and his campaign will respect these wishes moving forward.”

Michael Putland/Getty Images; Isaac Brekken/Getty Images)

Earth, Wind, & Fire vs. Republican National Convention

Earth, Wind, & Fire lashed out after their 1978 entry “September” was played on the Republican National Convention’s floor without their consent. “Another unauthorized use (September) at the Republican Convention, against our wishes,” the band tweeted from their verified account.

Artists taking a stand

Every rally needs music — the only problem is, musicians don’t always want to lend their songs to political campaigns. Here are 21 musicians who’ve spoken out against politicians playing their tracks at events, ranging from Bruce Springsteen going up against a trio of Republicans to Adele requesting that Donald Trump take her tunes off his public playlists.

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2 of 22Taylor Hill/WireImage; NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

Rihanna vs. Donald Trump

Please do stop the music: Upon learning that her music was blasting at one of Trump’s rallies, which he’s continued to hold in the two years since winning the 2016 presidential election, Rihanna has requested to be removed from POTUS’ playlist. After Washington Post White House bureau chief Philip Rucker tweeted that “Don’t Stop the Music” was playing at one of the events, the pop star replied, “Not for much longer…me nor my people would ever be at or around one of those tragic rallies, so thanks for the heads up Philip!”

Pharrell vs. Donald Trump

At a public event in Oct. 2018, the president played Pharrell Williams’ upbeat track “Happy” mere hours after a deadly shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue took 11 lives. The artist sent Trump a cease and desist letter following the use of his song. “On the day of the mass murder of 11 human beings at the hands of a deranged ‘nationalist,’ you played his song ‘Happy’ to a crowd at a political event in Indiana,” Williams’ attorney wrote. “There was nothing ‘happy’ about the tragedy inflicted upon our country on Saturday and no permission was granted for your use of this song for this purpose.”

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4 of 22Josh Brasted/WireImage; David J. Phillip/AP

Explosions in the Sky vs. Ted Cruz

Governor Greg Abbott used Explosions in the Sky’s “Your Hand in Mine” in a clip endorsing Ted Cruz, and the band expressed their disapproval on Twitter once someone pointed it out to them: “We are absolutely not okay with it,” they wrote. “Those are two people we don’t like very much. We’ll get to the bottom of this.”

Bruce Springsteen vs. Ronald Reagan, Bob Dole, and Pat Buchanan

Good rule of thumb: If you’re a Republican, don’t play a Springsteen song at your rally — especially not “Born in the U.S.A.,” a track that’s not as patriotic as Reagan, Dole, and Buchanan thought. Springsteen requested they all stop playing the song, and beginning in the ‘90s, he started performing a dour, acoustic version of the 1984 track at shows in order to more clearly convey its antiwar sentiment.

John Mellencamp vs. Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, and John McCain

Like Springsteen, Mellencamp has a bit of a history of telling Republican candidates to stop using his music: He objected when Reagan used “Pink Houses” in 1984, when Bush Jr. used “R.O.C.K. in the U.S.A.” in 2000, and when McCain used both “Our Country” and “Pink Houses” in 2008.

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7 of 22Ebet Roberts/Redferns; Cynthia Johnson/Liaison

Bobby McFerrin vs. George H.W. Bush

When McFerrin found out the senior Bush was using 1988’s “Don’t Worry, Be Happy,” he was, well, not happy. After McFerrin voiced his disagreement with Bush using the song, the presidential candidate tried to get McFerrin on his side by asking him to dinner, TheNew York Times reported, but McFerrin rejected the invitation.

Tom Petty vs. George W. Bush and Michele Bachmann

Petty means it when he sings that he’ll stand his ground in 1989’s “I Won’t Back Down,” a single used in the younger Bush’s campaign before Petty sent a cease and desist letter. That evidently didn’t scare Bachmann, because she played Petty’s “American Girl” when she campaigned in 2011 and, like Bush, also received a cease and desist letter from Petty’s team.

Sting vs. George W. Bush and Al Gore

Unlike most musicians who ask politicians to stop using their songs so it doesn’t seem like they’re endorsing them, Sting requested that Bush stop playing “Brand New Day” simply because he didn’t want to get involved in the U.S. election as an Englishman. “It’s not a polite thing to do,” his manager at the time, Miles Copeland, told Salon. Or so he said: Copeland also added that Sting would be telling Bush opponent Gore to stop using “Brand New Day” as well, but that, according to reports, never happened.

ABBA vs. John McCain

McCain loves ABBA. In fact, he once told Blenderthat ABBA’s “Dancing Queen” and “Take a Chance On Me” were in his top 10 favorite songs. But the Swedish band wasn’t willing to take a chance on McCain when he selected one of their singles for his 2008 campaign.

Advertisement

11 of 22Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; William Thomas Cain/Getty Images

Foo Fighters vs. John McCain

McCain’s campaign playlist was once again shorted when Foo Fighters found out he was playing “My Hero.” “The saddest thing about this is that ‘My Hero’ was written as a celebration of the common man and his extraordinary potential,” they said in a statement, the AP reported. “To have it appropriated without our knowledge and used in a manner that perverts the original sentiment of the lyric just tarnishes the song.”

Advertisement

12 of 22Jun Sato/WireImage; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Sam Moore vs. Barack Obama

A Democrat was asked to stop using a song for a change when Sam and Dave’s Sam Moore requested that Obama stop playing “Hold On, I’m Comin’” at rallies in 2008. In a letter to Obama, he wrote that “it is thrilling … to see that our country has matured to the place where it is no longer an impossibility for a man of color to really be considered as a legitimate candidate for the highest office in our land” but also clarified that he had not endorsed Obama and his vote “is a very private matter between myself and the ballot box.”

Survivor vs. Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney

Most musicians simply request that politicians stop using their songs, but Survivor went ahead and sued Gingrich for playing “Eye of the Tiger” during his presidential campaign. (They went easier on Romney, though, simply asking that he stop using “Eye of the Tiger,” which his team did.)

Advertisement

14 of 22Ebet Roberts/Redferns; Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images

Katrina and the Waves vs. Michele Bachmann

Bachmann had to stop using Katrina and the Waves’ 1985 hit “Walking on Sunshine” after the band issued a statement saying they didn’t endorse the use of their song by Bachmann.

Advertisement

15 of 22Gary Miller/FilmMagic; Matt Sullivan/Getty Images

Boston vs. Mike Huckabee

Former Boston member Barry Goudreau got in a bit of trouble once the rest of the band found out he’d been playing 1976’s “More Than a Feeling” at Huckabee’s campaign events. “Boston has never endorsed a political candidate, and with all due respect, would not start by endorsing a candidate who is the polar opposite of most everything Boston stands for,” the band’s founder Tom Scholz wrote in a letter to Huckabee before saying, “I think I’ve been ripped off, dude!”

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16 of 22Michael Tran/FilmMagic; Ty Wright/Getty Images

Neil Young vs. Donald Trump

Trump announced his bid for president with the help of Young’s “Rockin’ in the Free World,” to which Young immediately objected. In a statement, he said that Trump was not authorized to use the song. The Canadian citizen also revealed that he’s “a supporter of Bernie Sanders.”

Advertisement

17 of 22Theo Wargo/Getty Images; Scott Olson/Getty Images

Steven Tyler vs. Donald Trump

The Aerosmith frontman first asked Trump to stop using the band’s “Dream On” at his rallies in August 2015 — but Trump didn’t listen, so Tyler followed up a few months later by sending the candidate a cease and desist letter stating that Trump doesn’t have permission to use the track and that “it gives the false impression that [Tyler] is connected with or endorses Mr. Trump’s presidential bid.” His attorney clarified to EW that “this is not a political nor personal issue with Mr. Trump” and that “simply, one must get permission from the music creators.”

Advertisement

18 of 22Steven A Henry/WireImage; Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

R.E.M. vs. Donald Trump

R.E.M. did not feel fine when they found out Trump played “It’s the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)” at a September rally: In a statement on Facebook, they asked that Trump “cease and desist” from using their music. Frontman Michael Stipe then issued another statement via bassist Mike Mills’ Twitter that was… less polite. “Go f— yourselves, the lot of you — you sad, attention grabbing, power-hungry little men,” he said. “Do not use our music or my voice for your moronic charade of a campaign.”

Adele vs. Donald Trump

Adele wouldn’t even let Spotify play her music, so it’s no surprise that she also stopped Donald Trump from continuing to play “Rolling in the Deep” and “Skyfall” at his rallies, saying through a rep that she had “not given permission for her music to be used for any political campaigning.”

Advertisement

20 of 22Gary Miller/FilmMagic; Tasos Katopodis/AFP/Getty Images

Rolling Stones vs. Donald Trump

Trump’s usage of Rolling Stones’ songs prompted a stubborn stalemate with the legendary rockers. After the Republican candidate played the group’s 1981 hit “Start Me Up” to celebrate his Indiana primary win, the band issued a statement demanding he remove their tracks from his event playlist. Trump, who’d pulled from their discography throughout his campaign, insisted that while had had “no problem” with the Stones, he has the rights to use their music.

Advertisement

21 of 22Michael Putland/Getty Images; Isaac Brekken/Getty Images)

Queen vs. Donald Trump

Queen have chastised Trump more than once for using their music. The band initially scolded him in June after he played “We Are the Champions” ahead of his victory speech during the final round of Republican primaries. Guitarist Brian May wrote on the band’s website that they were actively pursuing options to stop Trump from playing their songs.

In July, the Republican candidate again borrowed “We Are the Champions” for his first-night walk onto the Republican National Convention stage, eliciting an aggravated response from Queen. “Queen does not want its music associated with any mainstream or political debate in any country. Nor does Queen want ‘We are the Champions’ to be used as an endorsement of Mr. Trump and the political views of the Republican Party,” they said in a statement. “We trust, hope and expect that Mr. Trump and his campaign will respect these wishes moving forward.”

Earth, Wind, & Fire vs. Republican National Convention

Earth, Wind, & Fire lashed out after their 1978 entry “September” was played on the Republican National Convention’s floor without their consent. “Another unauthorized use (September) at the Republican Convention, against our wishes,” the band tweeted from their verified account.